Admission requirements
N/A
Description
Ethics matters. It impacts our private lives, informs the structure of governmental institutions, guides our public policies and is of concern to the conduct of civil servants. The importance of ethical reflection becomes visible every time state officials or lay citizens are confronted with moral choices that permeate their actions, whether these choices concern our welfare and health systems, our sexual behaviour, the borders of our community, the rules for our mutual interactions or the kinds of restrictions and incentives the state can legitimately impose on us.
The purpose of this course is to examine two approaches for dealing with such moral choices. The first approach is generally known as applied ethics, and is premised on the claim that the workings of morality can be formulated in terms of a unified ethical theory. This approach implies that, ultimately, moral questions have correct answers and that the role of any appropriate ethical theory is to articulate a coherent conception of morality that can generate and justify these answers. The second (historically more recent) approach is usually called political ethics. Unlike defenders of applied ethics, supporters of political ethics think that disagreement is a persistent feature of our moral lives. Different moral considerations often pull or push us in opposite directions, and are not always reducible to a perfectly coherent ethical conception. Following this second approach, the task of ethics is not that of articulating a theory that captures the ultimate unity of morality. Rather, ethics is about formulating those principles whereby we can manage or, more modestly, make sense of our moral conflicts.
Course objectives
- Students should become familiar with some of the major debates and concepts of ethics (at a minimum, they should be able to master concepts such as ‘utilitarianism’, ‘deontology’, ‘virtue ethics’, ‘political ethics’, and so on);
- Students should acquire a close understanding of key modes of reasoning, interpreting and constructing an argument in ethical theory;
- Students should be able to identify the main claim or thesis of a philosophical text, summarise the way in which the argument is articulated and identify the limits of a philosophical argument;
- Students should be able to read ethical theory texts with a critical eye and think about the way in which the historical, social and political context of these texts matter for the argument that is being presented or for the mode of reasoning and the discourse adopted by various moral philosophers;
- Students should be able to articulate the ways in which the questions raised by different ethical theories can impact or inform the problems of governance, public policy and administration;
- Students should be able to master the basic presentation skills that are required in the context of a standard presentation event (conference, workshop, etc.).
Timetable
On the Public Administration front page of the Prospectus you will find links to the website and timetables, uSis and Brightspace.
Mode of instruction
- Lectures (attendance highly recommended) (7 x 2 hours)
- Workshops (2 sessions where student teams meet the course instructor to discuss their assignments)
Workshop attendance
No absence from the workshops is allowed, unless adequately justified (for example, a medical certificate or a message from the study advisor). If the student has an excuse for missing a workshop, the student has to hand in an extra assignment (decided by the course instructor) within one week following the workshop the student did not attend. If the student does not hand in the extra assignment in time, the student will be excluded from further participation in the workshops, which leads to a failure of the 2nd assignment for the course.
If the student provides no excuse for missing the workshop, the student will have to hand in 2 extra assignments (decided by the course instructor) within one week following the workshop the student did not attend. Absent these 2 extra assignments, the student will be excluded from further participation in the workshops, which leads to a failure of the 2nd assignment for the course.
According to established norms, a 5 ECTS course requires (5x28=) 140 hours of study.
For this course the study load is roughly divided as follows:
14 hours Lectures (7x2)
4 hours Workshops
32 hours Individual work required for the group assignment
5 hours Examination
85 hours Self-study
140 hours
Assessment method
1 group assignment: 50% of the final grade
1 written exam: 50% of the final grade
The grade of both exams has to be 5.5 or higher.
Compensation is not possible.
Partial grades obtained during the 2021/2022 academic year are valid in the 2022/2023 academic year.
Students that want to take part in a resit for a written exam, are required to register via uSis. Use the activity number that can be found on the ‘timetable exams’. For dates and times, please see course syllabus and schedule online.
For further information about the exam rules please see: Rules and Regulations
Reading list
TBS.
Registration
Register yourself via MyStudymap for each course, workgroup and exam (not all courses have workgroups and/or exams). Do so on time, before the start of the course; some courses and workgroups have limited spaces. You can view your personal schedule in MyTimetable after logging in.
Registration for this course is possible from Tuesday 13 December 13.00h.
Please note: registration for the workgroups is possible from Wednesday 8 March 13.00h.
Leiden University uses Brightspace as its online learning management system. After enrolment for the course in MyStudymap you will be automatically enrolled in the Brightspace environment of this course.
After registration for an exam you still need to confirm your attendance via MyStudymap. If you do not confirm, you will ultimately be de-registered and you will not be allowed to take the exam.
More information on registration via MyStudymap can be found on this page.
Please note: guest-/contract-/exchange students do not register via MyStudymap but via uSis. Guest-/contract-/exchange students also do not have to confirm their participation for exams via MyStudymap.
Contact
Dr. A. Poama a.poama@fgga.leidenuniv.nl
Remarks
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